Controlled field and laboratory studies on VHS and Ichtyophonus in Pacific herring: Section II in Investigations of disease factors affecting declines of Pacific herring populations in Prince William Sound

Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Restoration Project Annual Report, Restoration Project No. 97162
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Abstract

From 1995 through 1998 the controlled disease studies covered a wide range of topics including virus survival in seawater, development of natural immunity, effects of oil exposure on immunity, effect of synthetic immunosuppressants, epizootiology of VHSV in net pens, antibody production and the natural history of VHS in Pacific herring. Both VHSV and I. hoferi were was observed in fish that reached two-years-old while in captivity. Prior to 2 years old, fish that shown to be. serious pathogens of juvenile hening. A natural age-related resistance to VHS virus plaque assay and resistance to reinfection with the known minimum lethal dose of virus. survived an initial infection by VHSV developed an acquired immunity detectable by in vitro

Three years of consecutive monthly sampling of wild 0-year herring in Puget Sound revealed a VHSV carrier rate below 1%, but that this level of virus shedding was adequate to initiate an epizootic under confined conditions, and probably resulted in infection of free-ranging fish also. Over 50% of the virus was recoverable from seawater after 2 hours, was still detectable after six hours, and survived up to 100 h when ovarian fluid was present in the water.

Studies in PWS demonstrated that closed pounds play a role in transmission of VHSV to impounded fish steadily increased with confinement time and viral tissue titers were at very high susceptible fish, resulting in the rapid spread of virus within the pens. Prevalence of VHSV from levels in fish being released after 8 days in captivity. Viable virus was also recovered from the water inside and outside the net pens at levels adequate to initiate an epizootic in susceptible fish. of herring and that vitro culture was the most sensitive method for detecting it.

Studies on Ichthyophonus hoferi demonstrated that the organism is a potential serious pathogen

No evidence for increased susceptibility, mortality or loss of disease resistance was observed in wild or laboratory-reared herring exposed to oil or synthetic corticosteroids, either prior to or following exposure to VHSV.

Publication type Report
Publication Subtype State or Local Government Series
Title Controlled field and laboratory studies on VHS and Ichtyophonus in Pacific herring: Section II in Investigations of disease factors affecting declines of Pacific herring populations in Prince William Sound
Year Published 1999
Language English
Publisher Alaska Dept. of Fish and Game, Habitat and Restoration Division
Publisher location Anchorage, AK
Description 73 p.
Larger Work Title Investigations of disease factors affecting declines of Pacific herring populations in Prince William Sound
First page II-1
Last page II-73
Online Only (Y/N) N
Additional Online Files (Y/N) N
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